The authors of five recent books in the field of Indigenouswomen’s history wish to restore Indigenous women to history, as Ella Deloria did more than seventy years ago. The voices and experiences of Indigenous women are so often muted and marginalised in standard written historical sources, but now historians of Indigenous women are intent on providing a more complete presentation of Indigenous women as multidimensional, complex and active agents of history.Most are pivoting away from histories that emphasise how non-Indigenous people viewed and victimised Indigenous women toward histories that centre Indigenous women within their own cultural contexts by designing and using new historical methodologies.6 Yet, as some of these new designs and methodologies collide with older approaches, conflicts of interpretation arise in the negotiation of this new space for Indigenous women in history. The inclusion of Indigenous voices in the interpretation of their histories however, not only aligns with an Indigenous perspective like that of Ella Deloria, but remains an underutilised resource to a more complete and fuller history.